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Disclaimer: 'MS Views and News' DOES NOT endorse any products or services found on this blog. It is up to you to seek advice from your healthcare provider. The intent of this blog is to provide information on various medical conditions, medications, treatments, and procedures for your personal knowledge and to keep you informed of current health-related issues. It is not intended to be complete or exhaustive, nor is it a substitute for the advice of your physician. Should you or your family members have any specific medical problem, seek medical care promptly.

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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Multiple Sclerosis is a devastating disease in which patients usually have progressive paralysis throughout their body. Treatment options are limited because researchers still have not found a cause for the initiation of the killing of nerve cells that occurs. What researchers do know is that something allows the immune system to become activated and attack components of the nervous system. However, what sets it off remains a mystery.

That is why, in 2009, when Italian vascular surgeon Dr. Paulo Zamboni proposed that MS might be caused by leaky veins leading to the brain people took notice. He said that a procedure to clear up the blood vessels would stop the disease in its tracks and called the condition chronic cerebrospinal venous insufficiency, or CCSVI. He suggested that opening the veins of the neck and chest with an angioplasty-like device would relieve the symptoms and eventually could stop the disease.

He even offered proof that the procedure had worked on his wife, who had suffered from MS but had gone into remission after he had the surgery performed on her.

Since he had announced the procedure and toured the world giving lectures at medical conferences, universities and medical centers, an estimated 30,000 MS patients have sought out the procedure, which is performed in Poland, Bulgaria, Mexico, India and the United States. The procedure is not currently approved by the FDA for treatment of MS.

Now comes news of a small clinical trial at the University of Buffalo that examined the procedure in 30 MS patients. They found that while the procedure is safe, it had no benefit to patients' symptoms, quality of life or disease progression.

"What we found was rather surprising and unexpected," said neurosurgeon Dr. Adnan Siddiqui, co-principal investigator on the study. "It was quite the opposite of what we originally expected to find. The study showed that endovascular treatment of stenosed (blocked) veins had no effect in MS patients."

Additionally, MRI scans of patients who underwent the procedure found that in some patients there was an increase in brain lesions, a marker used to signify progression of the disease in MS.

"However, is this the last word on venous angioplasty? Absolutely not. I think a much larger cohort (group of patients) would be required to really demonstrate that definitivelysaid Dr. Siddiqu.

SYMPTOMS of MS

In multiple sclerosis , damage to the myelin in the central nervous system (CNS), and to the nerve fibers themselves, interferes with the transmission of nerve signals between the brain and spinal cord and other parts of the body. This disruption of nerve signals produces the primary symptoms of MS, which vary depending on where the damage has occurred.

Over the course of the disease, some symptoms will come and go, while others may be more lasting.

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Disclaimer:

"Stu's Views & MS News" / 'MS Views and News' DOES NOT endorse any products or services found on this blog. It is up to you to seek advice from your healthcare provider. The intent of this blog is to provide information on various medical conditions, medications, treatments, and procedures for your personal knowledge and to keep you informed of current health-related issues. It is not intended to be complete or exhaustive, nor is it a substitute for the advice of your physician. Should you or your family members have any specific medical problem, seek medical care promptly

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